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The Cover |

Street Light

Thomas B. Cole, MD, MPH
JAMA. 2011;306(16):1739. doi:10.1001/jama.2011.1450.
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Night after night the Italian painter Giacomo Balla (1871-1958) went to the Piazza Termini in the heart of Rome to look at the streetlights and consider an idea for a painting. Today, the arc lamps that lit up the Piazza Termini are used for searchlights and welding equipment, but in the early 1900s they were also used for lighting public spaces. Unfortunately, Balla stared so long at the streetlights that he was temporarily blinded, probably as a result of “arc eye” photokeratitis, a painful burn of the corneas resulting from unprotected exposure to the ultraviolet rays emitted by electrical arcs. He had to spend several days in a darkened room to allow his corneas to heal. For an artist, even a temporary loss of vision is a catastrophic price to pay for a picture, but Balla came away with a concept based on a concentric spray of multicolored fragments of light.

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Giacomo Balla (1871-1958), Street Light, circa 1910-1911 (dated on painting 1909), Italian. Oil on canvas. 174.7 × 114.7 cm. Courtesy of the Museum of Modern Art (http://www.moma.org/), New York, New York; Hillman Periodicals Fund, 7.1954. Photo credit: © The Museum of Modern Art/licensed by SCALA/Art Resource, New York, New York. © 2011 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York, New York/SIAE, Rome, Italy.

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